Effect of adenosine and cordycepin on recombinant antibody production yields in two different Chinease hamster ovary cell lines.

Biotechnol Prog

Department of Pharmaceutics, Faculty of Science, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences (UIPS), Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands.

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how adenosine and its derivative, cordycepin, affect the production of the monoclonal antibody adalimumab in two CHO cell lines with different amplification systems.*
  • Results indicated that while adenosine slowed cell growth and enhanced cell cycle activity, it optimally improved antibody production at a concentration of 1 mM on day 2, especially in GS-KO CHO cells in the absence of glucose.*
  • Cordycepin required much higher doses in CHO-DHFR cells to show effects on growth, but only increased antibody production in cultures without glucose, highlighting its variable efficiency compared to adenosine.*

Article Abstract

In this study, we investigated the effect of adenosine and its derivative cordycepin on the production yield of a recombinant human monoclonal antibody (adalimumab) in two commonly used Chinese Hamster ovary (CHO) cell lines that have different gene amplification systems, namely CHO-DHFR and GS-CHO knockout (GS-KO CHO) cells and that were grown in batch culture, with and without glucose feeding. The results showed that adenosine suppressed the cell growth rate and increased the fraction of cells in S phase of the cell cycle for both CHO cell lines. Different concentrations and exposure times of adenosine feeding were tested. The optimal yield of adalimumab production was achieved with the addition of 1 mM adenosine on day 2 after start of the batch culture. Adenosine could significantly improve antibody titers and productivity in both CHO cell lines in cultures without glucose feeding. However, upon glucose feeding, adenosine did not improve antibody titers in CHO-DHFR cells but extended culture duration and significantly increased antibody titers in GS-KO CHO cells. Therefore, adenosine supplementation might be useful for antibody production in GS-KO CHO cells in medium- to large-scale batches. In case of cordycepin, a derivative of adenosine, CHO-DHFR cells required higher concentration of cordycepin than GS-KO CHO cells around 10 times to display the changes in cell growth and cell cycle. Moreover, cordycepin could significantly increase antibody titers only in CHO-DHFR cell cultures without glucose feeding.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/btpr.3403DOI Listing

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